76 research outputs found

    Nothing Lasts Forever: Environmental Discourses on the Collapse of Past Societies

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    The study of the collapse of past societies raises many questions for the theory and practice of archaeology. Interest in collapse extends as well into the natural sciences and environmental and sustainability policy. Despite a range of approaches to collapse, the predominant paradigm is environmental collapse, which I argue obscures recognition of the dynamic role of social processes that lie at the heart of human communities. These environmental discourses, together with confusion over terminology and the concepts of collapse, have created widespread aporia about collapse and resulted in the creation of mixed messages about complex historical and social processes

    Plutarch and the Sublime Hymn of Ofellius Laetus

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    A New Inscription of Arrian

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    The philosopher-governor of Cappadocia honored by I.Corinth 124 is Arrian, and the Gellius Menander who honored him is the dedicatee of Epictetus' Dicourses. <!--EndFragment--

    Augustus on Aegina

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    Old and New in the History of Judaea

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